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Author: Subject: Synthesis of DDT?
Sev
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[*] posted on 4-6-2006 at 02:18
Synthesis of DDT?


After getting attacked my mosquitos yet again in my house, with the Mosquito Onslaught only beginning, I decided I wanted to try to do something about it. I want to synthesize and paint the walls of my freaking room with DDT. On the other hand, I have zero organic chem experience.

Anyone got a rundown of the synthesis I can follow?
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[*] posted on 4-6-2006 at 03:18


DDT is made by condensing chloral with chlorobenzene in the presence of Oleum or chlorosulfonic acid. On Lambdasyn there's a description of the synthesis. It's actually quite straightforward when you have the chems... and getting those is the real problem.

You'd be better off by making HCH (hexachlorocyclohexane, known under various trade names such as Lindan), the chems for which are easier to get.
It is made by chlorinating benzene at its boiling point under irradiation with a strong light source and in the strict absence of friedel- crafts catalysts such as Fe or Al. The product is a solid and crystallizes upon cooling if the synthesis was successful.
For benzene, look up the thread on it here, it is easy to make.
Chlorine too.




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[*] posted on 4-6-2006 at 10:01


Oleum or chlorosulfonic acid are not really necessary, I have a method from a lab book which just uses conc sulfuric. It is attached.

Are you sure you did not mean DEET; N,N-diethyltoluamide? This would be easy as well to make, but one of the precursors, diethylamine is heavily watched because it can be used for making LSD. You also would need toluyl chloride, but I don't think it is heavily watched.

DDT synth.JPG - 151kB




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[*] posted on 4-6-2006 at 10:14


While DDT is of fairly low human toxicity, the same cannot be said of the precursors. Chloral is a controlled drug and the manufacture of DDT is generally banned.
DEET is a much better bet.
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Sev
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[*] posted on 4-6-2006 at 11:13


Thanks, folks, you've been a lot of help.

And, yeah, I know that manufacture of DDT is banned -- which is why I'm making it myself. ;) I'm used to dealing with toxic chemicals, but I'd like to try making some DDT 'cause it's essentially harmless to humans in any sane dosage, it can be painted on surfaces and hangs around for a long time, and acts quickly and lethally against insects. DEET is just a repellant, and I can get that anywhere. I want something to kill the bastards when they decide to rest on my walls -- which is -just- what DDT was designed to do. ;)

(ALso, FWIW, DDT used in this manner doesn't pose environmental hazards, since it doesn't move along the food chain, so I wouldn't feel guilty about that.)
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[*] posted on 5-6-2006 at 02:32


I have some DDT, in some bottles of preparations made to kill borers and spiders about 40 or 50 years ago. I am holding on to them, in case they are ever needed.
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[*] posted on 5-6-2006 at 10:26


Just so you know. DDT DOES undergo biological magnification. To put it briefly, as it travels up food chains it can effectively concentrate millions of times stronger then the initial level that it was introduced as. Although this may not mean much to you, it meant alot the the bald eagle population, whale populations, and other species at higher trophic levels. Do a search. Its does happen. I did a semester's worth of research in a related field not too long ago.
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[*] posted on 5-6-2006 at 15:46


XxDaTxX, if you actually read Sev's post, you'd never have made your comment. Certainly, DDT DOES undergo biomagnification, leading to severe problems for a variety of species. However, if you use it carefully, and particularly in an application such as coating walls indoors, then there's not a problem. It's all about taking necessary precautions to ensure the possibility of negative effects is minimised. Sev, reading his post, recognises that fact! It can only biomagnified if it's eaten, and then the thing that ate it is eaten, and then... So unless Sev's cat likes the taste, and and also like to visciously harrass the doberman up the road, there's no problem.

As a side note, DDT is still relatively widely used in areas of the world where malaria is endemic, since the anopheles (sp?) mosquito, which is responsible for transmitting the disease, is still distinctly sensitive to it (whereas many other species have developed a marked resistance). Since these areas are generally third world and thus poor, and since DDT is quite cheap, it is the insecticide of choice for trying to control mosquito populations.

[Edited on 5-6-2006 by ziqquratu]
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[*] posted on 6-6-2006 at 11:52


DDT is sufficiently volatile that it will, in spite of ziqquratu's protestations to the contrary, enter the food chain.
Go for one of the pyrethrins- much more bio friendly and you get to grow pretty flowers.
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[*] posted on 7-6-2006 at 20:35


Thank you, ziqquratu, you summed up exactly my thoughts.

Quote:
Originally posted by unionised
DDT is sufficiently volatile that it will, in spite of ziqquratu's protestations to the contrary, enter the food chain.
Go for one of the pyrethrins- much more bio friendly and you get to grow pretty flowers.


First off, I wouldn't be using this on a large scale. I don't think that volatilized DDT from an application on the walls of a few rooms would enter the food chain in any appreciable way, even considering biomagnification. I'd be making a few grams of it, hucking it in a spray bottle with alcohol, and spraying the walls down once. The small amount of chemical involved and the huge amount of dilution in air means that the amount entering the food chain is negligible.

Secondly -- pyrethrins, from what I've read about DDT and seen with them, don't work as well. And they're more toxic to higher life forms, too -- though that's still a nonissue with the small amounts involved.
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[*] posted on 8-6-2006 at 09:43


"I wouldn't be using this on a large scale."
Most people didn't; that didn't stop it being a problem.
"Secondly -- pyrethrins, from what I've read about DDT and seen with them, don't work as well. And they're more toxic to higher life forms, too "
They work well enough for most people and, since they biodegrade and aren't stable in sunlight, the toxicity really isn't a problem.
Since you aren't going to get hold of chloral (Or at least, not legally or easily) I don't suppose it matters.
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[*] posted on 30-1-2012 at 09:20


Chloral should be a relatively easy preparation. prepare acetaldehyde by one of the methods on the board such as dehydrogenation of ethanol or dehydration of glycol, add a few drops of muriatic acid and pass chlorine gas into the solution giving mono, di and/or trichloroacetaldehyde.
to get chlorobenzene one opens the catalog dials the 1800 number and reads off his digits. or Mothballs contain p-Dichlorobenzene one could likely dissolve them in ether and reduce to monochlorobenzene w/ magnesium metal.
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[*] posted on 30-1-2012 at 12:18


Quote: Originally posted by unionised  
"I wouldn't be using this on a large scale."
"Most people didn't; that didn't stop it being a problem."
"Secondly -- pyrethrins, from what I've read about DDT and seen with them, don't work as well. And they're more toxic to higher life forms, too "


DDT was used in ton scale for agricultural use and air spraying for mosquito control, which is where most environmental exposure come from. It would have never had the issues it did if people were using it is small amounts inside only.

The same for chlordane, which was a valuable chemical for termite treatment, but was banned due to people using it in large fields as a agrochemical omni-pesticide. When used in termite control, a pound could treat a house for 40+ years, and it sticks to clay very strongly, so it does not leach out much into water, which many other pesticide do.

The problem with mankind is that frequently once we find something useful, people over use it until it becomes a problem. The same could be said for antibiotic use in farm animals, and many other chemicals. If people used more common sense (yes, it is an oxymoron), then many of the problems of mankind would not exist.
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[*] posted on 30-1-2012 at 12:35


Is the Original Poster still here half a dozen years on.
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[*] posted on 30-1-2012 at 13:12


Quote: Originally posted by unionised  
Is the Original Poster still here half a dozen years on.


Ummm....

No!

http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/member.php?action=viewpro...
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[*] posted on 7-2-2012 at 08:44


Why you are making DDT it will leads to biological magnification
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[*] posted on 7-2-2012 at 09:14


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDT#Effects_on_human_health

It is not benign...




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[*] posted on 8-2-2012 at 07:55


DDT is very effective and comparable nice to the environment if not sprayed onto the fields by the ton.

But for to keep a room free from vermin it is sufficient to mix pepper or chili-powder or plain capsaicin into the paint.

Works since a thousand years and more...
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[*] posted on 8-2-2012 at 08:53


Not to derail the thread but did that book come from the library here or is it a scanned section of one of your own books?

That aside DDT while notorious might not be the best compound for the job given. But ehh I am not all knowing..
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[*] posted on 22-3-2012 at 16:56


I think the term 'biomagnification' is misleading and confusing. I've always heard it the problem being referred to as 'bio-concentration' or "bio-accumulation"

'Magnification' makes it seem like its effect or quantity is increased through the food chain, when really it is just concentrated.

Practically speaking, the amount that any individual at home could produce could never contribute to the problem of 'bio-accumulation' or 'bio-concentration' on an appreciable scale.

The term is mostly used to describe things that are absorbed and NOT 'bio-degradable', i.e., even at 100% transmission through the food chain, you'd need to have a pretty isolated environment for 100g of DDT to end up in 1 bird (exaggerated for emphasis). The problem of bioaccumulation is based on industrial scale use of a chemical and it being ubiquitous in a food source, NOT resulting from a single point source of the material.

No DDT is CREATED by it travelling up the food chain, it is only concentrated in organisms feeding from a uniformly or highly contaminated food source. It is banned to avoid its ubiquity, not because its effects amplify through the food chain.
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[*] posted on 15-8-2014 at 08:11
DDT synthesis by the procedure above


4.2 mL (4.662 g, 41.4 mmol) of chlorobenzene and 4.0 g (24.2 mmol) of chloral hydrate were mixed in a 100 mL 1N RBF and heated until chloral hydrate had dissolved. 36 mL of concentrated sulfuric acid was added slowly and the flask was closed with drying tube. Subsequently, a white turbidity appeared and this was set to be magnetically stirred over the weekend, however at some point the stir bar got stuck.

White solid spheres were formed over the weekend and the reaction mixture turned brown. TLC of the solid shows two spots (Developed in n-hexane, detection UV). Reaction mixture was poured into a 400 mL beaker half filled with ice-cold water. A fairly exothermic reaction was observed. After cooling, water was decanted of the solid and the solid was first washed with 50 mL of 5 % sodium bicarbonate solution then with 3x25 mL of water. This was vacuum filtered and left to dry on air. Still slightly wet solid was transfered into a clean 100 mL Erlenmeyer flask and dissolved in 25 mL of hot isopropanol (Used too little!). After cooling, a fine white crystalline solid formed which was then vacuum filtered and dried under vacuum. Yield 3.23 g (44.0 %) of white powder that has a slight apple odor, mp 100-103 °C.

Theoretical mass is 7.34 g (20.7 mmol) and the literature mp is 108.5 °C.

TLC of the final product shows traces of the second spot, presumably o,p isomer. 1H NMR shows the o,p isomer as impurity.

1 reac mixture.jpg - 18kB 2 crude product.jpg - 22kB 3 crude product tlc.jpg - 10kB 4 recrystalized.jpg - 18kB 5 product tlc.jpg - 8kB 6 filtration.jpg - 15kB 7 final.jpg - 7kB
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[*] posted on 17-8-2014 at 08:21


Nice write-up, and welcome to the forum!



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[*] posted on 30-8-2014 at 03:19


Thanks!

It would be interesting to test the usefulness of this material, especially where the exposure to it would be minimal. One particular example comes in mind - wood boring insects. A solution of DDT could be made and injected into exit holes which this pest make, killing them (presumably) for years and years later. DDT should be superior to commercial pyrethroids or organophospates even if it is half as effective because it degrades much slower and is not toxic as organophospates are.
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[*] posted on 30-8-2014 at 04:15


Yes, however DDT has huge environmental impacts, so i would not suggest doing so...



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[*] posted on 25-3-2024 at 09:46


Quote: Originally posted by carothers  
TLC of the final product shows traces of the second spot, presumably o,p isomer. 1H NMR shows the o,p isomer as impurity.


Is there a way to purify the product to get rid of the o,p isomer or any DDE/DDD in there?

I checked pubchem and a recrystalization might be possible?, maybe in like benzene or something

Quote:
Practically insoluble in dilute acids, alkalies. ... Freely soluble in pyridine, dioxane; solubility in organic solvents increases with rise in temperatures.
Quote:
Solubility, g/100 mL solvent: 58 acetone; 78 benzene; 42 benzyl benzoate; 45 carbon tetrachloride; 74 chlorobenzene; 116 cyclohexanone; 2 g/100 ml 95% alcohol; 28 ethyl ether; 10 gasoline; 3 isopropanol; 8-10 kerosene; 75 morpholine; 11 peanut oil; 10-16 pine oil; 61 tetralin; 50 tributyl phosphate.


But this still makes me uncertain if the impurities would recrystallize out with it (especially the o,p isomer)...


Of course i'd imagine doing a column would work but thats pricey and quite involved lol so idk




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